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ADVANCED AIRCRAFT FLIGHT PERFORMANCE
This book deals with aircraft flight performance. It focuses on commer-cial aircraft but also considers examples of high-performance militaryaircraft. The framework is a multi-disciplinary engineering analysis,fully supported by flight simulation, with software validation at sev-eral levels. The book covers topics such as geometrical configurations,configuration aerodynamics and determination of aerodynamic deriva-tives, weight engineering, propulsion systems (gas turbine engines andpropellers), aircraft trim, flight envelopes, mission analysis, trajectoryoptimisation, aircraft noise, noise trajectories and analysis of environ-mental performance. A unique feature of this book is the discussionand analysis of the environmental performance of the aircraft, focusingon topics such as aircraft noise and carbon dioxide emissions.
Dr. Antonio Filippone’s expertise is in the fields of computational andexperimental aerodynamics, flight mechanics, energy conversion sys-tems, propulsion systems, rotating machines (helicopter rotors, pro-pellers, wind turbines), systems engineering, and design and optimisa-tion. He has published more than eighty technical papers, ten bookchapters, and two books, including Flight Performance of Fixed andRotary Wing Aircraft (2006).
1. J. M. Rolfe and K. J. Staples (eds.): Flight Simulation2. P. Berlin: The Geostationary Applications Satellite3. M. J. T. Smith: Aircraft Noise4. N. X. Vinh: Flight Mechanics of High-Performance Aircraft5. W. A. Mair and D. L. Birdsall: Aircraft Performance6. M. J. Abzug and E. E. Larrabee: Airplane Stability and Control7. M. J. Sidi: Spacecraft Dynamics and Control8. J. D. Anderson: A History of Aerodynamics9. A. M. Cruise, J. A. Bowles, C. V. Goodall, and T. J. Patrick: Principles of Space
Instrument Design10. G. A. Khoury (ed.): Airship Technology, Second Edition11. J. P. Fielding: Introduction to Aircraft Design12. J. G. Leishman: Principles of Helicopter Aerodynamics, Second Edition13. J. Katz and A. Plotkin: Low-Speed Aerodynamics, Second Edition14. M. J. Abzug and E. E. Larrabee: Airplane Stability and Control: A History of
the Technologies that Made Aviation Possible, Second Edition15. D. H. Hodges and G. A. Pierce: Introduction to Structural Dynamics and
Aeroelasticity, Second Edition16. W. Fehse: Automatic Rendezvous and Docking of Spacecraft17. R. D. Flack: Fundamentals of Jet Propulsion with Applications18. E. A. Baskharone: Principles of Turbomachinery in Air-Breathing Engines19. D. D. Knight: Numerical Methods for High-Speed Flows20. C. A. Wagner, T. Huttl, and P. Sagaut (eds.): Large-Eddy Simulation for
Acoustics21. D. D. Joseph, T. Funada, and J. Wang: Potential Flows of Viscous and
Viscoelastic Fluids22. W. Shyy, Y. Lian, H. Liu, J. Tang, and D. Viieru: Aerodynamics of Low
Reynolds Number Flyers23. J. H. Saleh: Analyses for Durability and System Design Lifetime24. B. K. Donaldson: Analysis of Aircraft Structures, Second Edition25. C. Segal: The Scramjet Engine: Processes and Characteristics26. J. F. Doyle: Guided Explorations of the Mechanics of Solids and Structures27. A. K. Kundu: Aircraft Design28. M. I. Friswell, J. E. T. Penny, S. D. Garvey, and A. W. Lees: Dynamics of
Rotating Machines29. B. A. Conway (ed.): Spacecraft Trajectory Optimization30. R. J. Adrian and J. Westerweel: Particle Image Velocimetry31. G. A. Flandro, H. M. McMahon, and R. L. Roach: Basic Aerodynamics32. H. Babinsky and J. K. Harvey: Shock Wave–Boundary-Layer Interactions33. C. K. W. Tam: Computational Aeroacoustics: A Wave Number Approach34. A. Filippone: Advanced Aircraft Flight Performance
This publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exceptionand to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements,no reproduction of any part may take place without the writtenpermission of Cambridge University Press.
First published 2012
Printed in the United States of America
A catalog record for this publication is available from the British Library.
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Filippone, Antonio, 1965–Advanced aircraft flight performance / Antonio Filippone.
p. cm. – (Cambridge aerospace series ; 34)Includes bibliographical references and index.ISBN 978-1-107-02400-7 (hardback)1. Airplanes – Performance. 2. Airplanes – Design and construction. I. Title.TL671.4.F449 2012629.132′3–dc23 2012015394
ISBN 978-1-107-02400-7 Hardback
Cambridge University Press has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy ofURLs for external or third-party Internet Web sites referred to in this publicationand does not guarantee that any content on such Web sites is, or will remain, accurateor appropriate.
1.1 Performance Parameters 21.2 Flight Optimisation 41.3 Certificate of Airworthiness 41.4 The Need for Upgrading 61.5 Military Aircraft Requirements 71.6 Review of Comprehensive Performance Programs 91.7 The Scope of This Book 101.8 Comprehensive Programs in This Book 13
2.1 Model for Transport Aircraft 162.2 Wire-Frame Definitions 20
2.2.1 Stochastic Method for Reference Areas 212.3 Wing Sections 232.4 Wetted Areas 24
2.4.1 Lifting Surfaces 242.4.2 Fuselage 252.4.3 Nacelles and Pylons 282.4.4 Winglets 292.4.5 Flaps, Slats and Other Control Surfaces 302.4.6 Model Verification: Cross-Sectional Area 30
2.5 Aircraft Volumes 312.5.1 Case Study: Do Aircraft Sink or Float on Water? 322.5.2 Wing Fuel Tanks 33
3.1 A Question of Size 453.2 Design and Operational Weights 473.3 Weight Management 513.4 Determination of Operational Limits 523.5 Centre of Gravity Envelopes 53
3.5.1 CG Travel during Refuelling 543.5.2 CG Travel in Flight 553.5.3 Design Limits on CG Position 573.5.4 Determination of the Zero-Fuel CG Limit 593.5.5 Influence of CG Position on Performance 59
3.6 Operational Moments 603.7 Use of Wing Tanks 613.8 Mass and Structural Properties 62
3.8.1 Mass Distribution 643.8.2 Centre of Gravity 683.8.3 Moments of Inertia 683.8.4 Case Study: Moments of Inertia 73Summary 75Bibliography 75Nomenclature for Chapter 3 76
4.2.9 Case Study: Aerodynamics of the F4 Wind-Tunnel Model 1024.2.10 Case Study: Drag Analysis of Transport Aircraft 1034.2.11 Case Study: Drag Analysis of the ATR72-500 1044.2.12 Case Study: Drag Analysis of the Airbus A380-861 104
4.3 Transonic Airfoil Model 1054.4 Aircraft Drag at Transonic and Supersonic Speeds 108
4.4.1 Drag of Bodies of Revolution 1104.5 Buffet Boundaries 1134.6 Aerodynamic Derivatives 1144.7 Float-Plane’s Hull Resistance in Water 1154.8 Vortex Wakes 116
Summary 118Bibliography 118Nomenclature for Chapter 4 121
5.3 Turbofan Engine Model 1305.3.1 Aero-Thermodynamic Model 1325.3.2 Determination of Design Point 1335.3.3 Case Study: General Electric CF6-80C2 1345.3.4 Rubber Engines 1375.3.5 Effects of Contamination 1385.3.6 Performance Deterioration 1395.3.7 Data Handling 140
5.4 Turboprop Engines 1415.4.1 Case Study: Turboprop PW127M 143
5.5 Turbojet with After-Burning 1435.6 Generalised Engine Performance 1455.7 Auxiliary Power Unit 147
5.7.1 Case Study: Honeywell RE-220 APU 149Summary 149Bibliography 150Nomenclature for Chapter 5 150
6.2 Propulsion Models 1566.2.1 Axial Momentum Theory 1576.2.2 The Blade Element Method 1606.2.3 Propeller in Non-Axial Flight 1636.2.4 Case Study: Hamilton-Sundstrand F568 Propeller 165
7.1 Longitudinal Trim at Cruise Conditions 1797.1.1 Trim Drag 1837.1.2 Solution of the Static Longitudinal Trim 1837.1.3 Stick-Free Longitudinal Trim 184
7.2 Airplane Control under Thrust Asymmetry 1867.2.1 Dihedral Effect 186Summary 192Bibliography 192Nomenclature for Chapter 7 192
10.2.1 Steady Climb of Jet Airplane 27010.2.2 Steady Climb of Propeller Airplane 27110.2.3 Climb at Maximum Angle of Climb 272
10.3 Climb to Altitude of a Commercial Airplane 27310.3.1 Climb Profiles 27310.3.2 OEI Take-Off and Go-Around 27710.3.3 Governing Equations 27710.3.4 Boundary-Value Problem 27810.3.5 Numerical Issues 28110.3.6 Initial Climb with One Engine Inoperative 282
10.4 Climb of Commercial Propeller Aircraft 28210.5 Energy Methods 285
10.5.1 Total-Energy Model 28610.5.2 Specific Excess Power Charts 28810.5.3 Differential Excess Power Charts 290
10.6 Minimum Problems with the Energy Method 29110.6.1 Minimum Time to Climb and Steepest Climb 29110.6.2 Minimum Fuel to Climb 29210.6.3 Polar Chart for the Climb Rate 292
12.2.1 Specific Air Range at Subsonic Speed 33012.2.2 Figure of Merit 33112.2.3 Weight-Altitude Relationship 332
12.3 Numerical Solution of the Specific Air Range 33212.3.1 Case Study: Gulfstream G550 33512.3.2 Case Study: ATR72-500 33812.3.3 Effects of Atmospheric Winds on SAR 338
12.4 The Range Equation 33912.4.1 Endurance 341
12.5 Subsonic Cruise of Jet Aircraft 34112.5.1 Cruise at Constant Altitude and Mach Number 34212.5.2 Cruise at Constant Altitude and Lift Coefficient 34312.5.3 Cruise at Constant Mach and Lift Coefficient 34312.5.4 Comparison among Cruise Programs 34412.5.5 Fuel Burn for Given Range 345
12.6 Cruise Range of Propeller Aircraft 34612.7 Cruise Altitude Selection 34712.8 Cruise Performance Deterioration 34912.9 Cost Index and Economic Mach Number 35012.10 Centre of Gravity Position 35212.11 Supersonic Cruise 353
12.11.1 Cruise at Constant Altitude and Mach Number 35412.11.2 Cruise at Constant Mach Number and Lift Coefficient 355Summary 355Bibliography 356Nomenclature for Chapter 12 357
15.2 Range-Payload Chart 42615.2.1 Case Study: Range Sensitivity Analysis 42915.2.2 Case Study: Payload-Range of the ATR72-500 43015.2.3 Calculation of the Payload-Range Chart 430
15.3 Mission Analysis 43215.3.1 Mission Range for Given Fuel and Payload 434
15.4 Mission Fuel for Given Range and Payload 43515.4.1 Mission-Fuel Prediction 43515.4.2 Mission-Fuel Iterations 436
15.6 Take-Off Weight Limited by MLW 44215.7 Mission Problems 443
15.7.1 Cruise with Intermediate Stop 44315.7.2 Fuel Tankering 44415.7.3 Equal-Time Point and Point-of-No-Return 446
15.8 Direct Operating Costs 44815.9 Case Study: Aircraft and Route Selection 45315.10 Case Study: Fuel Planning for Specified Range, B777-300 45515.11 Case Study: Payload-Range Analysis of Float-Plane 460
15.11.1 Estimation of Floats Drag from Payload-Range Chart 46015.12 Risk Analysis in Aircraft Performance 463
Summary 465Bibliography 466Nomenclature for Chapter 15 467
18.2.1 Cumulative Noise Index 56118.2.2 Noise-Program Flowchart 562
18.3 Flight-Mechanics Integration 56418.3.1 Noise Data Handling 565
18.4 Noise Sensitivity Analysis 56618.5 Case Study: Noise Trajectories of Jet Aircraft 56818.6 Case Study: Noise Trajectories of Propeller Aircraft 57018.7 Further Parametric Analysis of Noise Performance 57218.8 Verification of the Aircraft-Noise Model 57418.9 Noise Footprint 578
19.1 Aircraft Contrails 58919.1.1 Cirrus Clouds 59119.1.2 Cruise Altitude Flexibility 59319.1.3 The Contrail Factor 59519.1.4 Effects of Propulsive Efficiency 59619.1.5 Heat Released in High Atmosphere 599
19.2 Radiative Forcing of Exhaust Emissions 59919.3 Landing and Take-Off Emissions 60019.4 Case Study: Carbon-Dioxide Emissions 60419.5 The Perfect Flight 60619.6 Emissions Trading 60819.7 Other Aspects of Emissions 609
Summary 610Bibliography 611Nomenclature for Chapter 19 612
2.1 Cross-sectional areas of selected supercritical wing sections page 232.2 Volume breakdown of selected aircraft; all volumes in [m3] 332.3 Calculations of MAC for the Airbus A320-200 aircraft; graphs on
the same scale 352.4 Analysis of the geometry of the F4 aircraft model 372.5 Wetted-area breakdown for the selected aircraft (calculated). All
areas are in [m2]; ()* data are approximate 383.1 Payload data for very large aircraft; X is the range at maximum
payload 473.2 Standard passenger weights (rounded to full kg) 523.3 Fuel tanks of some Airbus airplanes. ACT = Additional Central
Tanks; Jet-A1 density at 15 ℃ = 0.804 kg/l 633.4 Weight breakdown of Airbus airplanes; mass in [kg] 733.5 Airplane mass properties at take-off-empty (no fuel) configuration
(calculated) 733.6 Coefficients of Equation 3.44 744.1 Profile drag sensitivity for the Airbus A380-861 resulting from
�Awet = 2%. All drag coefficients are given as drag counts 1054.2 Aircraft separation following ICAO rules 1185.1 Power ratings for PW127 turboprop engine variants, sea level;
maximum temperatures as indicated 1295.2 Turbofan-engine parameters used for flight and aircraft-noise
calculations 1335.3 Selected engine data for the CF6-80C2A3; data with an asterisk ∗ are
estimated 1355.4 Typical APU fuel flow [kg/s], depending on load type and
atmospheric conditions 1485.5 Estimated APU power and emission database 1486.1 Design limitations of the Dowty propeller R391; �w is the wind
direction 1566.2 Some notable propellers and their applications 1577.1 Stability derivatives for calculation of airplane response to
8.1 Sea-level data of the International Standard Atmosphere 1968.2 Recognised international symbols for design air speeds and Mach
numbers 2089.1 International symbols for take-off of a transport airplane 2259.2 Delay in response time after activation for selected systems 2409.3 Average rolling coefficient for some runway conditions 2559.4 Estimated fuel burn during a taxi-out 26110.1 Approximate limit speeds for selected commercial aircraft 27510.2 Key events in the OEI take-off and go-around procedure 27810.3 Climb report for the Airbus A320-200 with CFM56-5C4P turbofan
engines and 331-9 APU; standard day, no wind 28010.4 Climb report for the case shown in Figure 10.6 28510.5 Climb time and fuel for the flight paths shown in Figure 10.15 29511.1 Flap and slat settings for the Airbus A320-200 30511.2 Descent report for the A320-200, conventional descent 30811.3 Descent report for the A320-200, continuous descent approach 30811.4 Definition of landing speeds 31811.5 Limit crosswind speeds coupled with runway conditions 32112.1 Summary of subsonic cruise conditions, jet aircraft 34512.2 SAR penalty due to non-optimal cruise altitude for some Airbus
airplanes 34914.1 Characteristics of aviation fuels, at 15 ◦C; data are averages 39814.2 Characteristics of turbine fuels Jet-A and Jet-A1 39815.1 Fuel use for mixed long- and short-range service of the Boeing
B777-300 (calculated) 44415.2 Summary of parameters for DOC model 45215.3 Calculated payload fuel efficiency for long-haul commercial flight 45315.4 Operational data for mission analysis in case study 45615.5 Summary of flight-planning analysis 45715.6 Taxi-out report of fuel/weight-planning analysis 45815.7 Take-off report of fuel/weight-planning analysis 45815.8 Cruise report of fuel/weight-planning analysis 45915.9 Basic performance data of model float-plane 46015.10 Estimated floats’ dimensions 46016.1 Summary of integral noise metrics 47216.2 Polar directivity levels 48516.3 Empirical constants for turbine acoustic power 48616.4 Spectrum function for broadband noise 48717.1 Numerical coefficients for Equation 17.7 53717.2 Typical values for flow resistivity and inverse effective depth 54218.1 Microphone positions for aircraft-noise measurements at London
Heathrow 55718.2 Noise sensitivity matrix for a Boeing 777-300 for ± 2 dB on take-off
and landing trajectories (simulated data) 56718.3 ATR72-500 noise trajectories; All noise levels are in dB 572
18.4 Calculated noise metrics (in dB) over a conventional and steeplanding trajectory at a FAR/ICAO landing point and point 1,000 mupstream 573
19.1 ICAO flight modes, times and thrust rating as % of maximum thrust 60219.2 LTO emissions summary for Airbus A320-200 with CFM56 engines 60319.3 Analysis of a perfect flight with an Airbus A320-200 model 608A.1 Weights and capacities of the G-550 618A.2 Basic dimensions of the G-550 618A.3 Operational limits of the G550 619A.4 Selected data of the Rolls-Royce BR710 C4-11 gas-turbine engine 619A.5 Landing gear of the G550 620B.1 Certified noise levels for commercial aircraft 622B.2 Certified noise levels for commercial aircraft (part 2) 623
This book is a derivative of an earlier textbook on flight performance. This newwork reflects my increased wisdom on the subject and represents an almost completedeparture from closed-form solutions that are traditionally taught in under-graduateand post-graduate programs. Over the past several years, I have benefited from theexperience of teaching a flight performance course to senior engineers from industry,government departments and academia. In the process, I learned a few new thingsthat now find a place somewhere in the book.
There is an increase in numerical methods in all fields of engineering; neverthe-less, flight performance has remarkably resisted change. Some closed-form solutionshave been retained for those engineers who need a quick answer. The modern air-plane is a complex engineering machine governed by systems, software and avionics.Primitive methods are still widely used, which are then applied to aircraft designand produce results of dubious accuracy that cannot be assessed. Worryingly, thesemethods are used in most “conceptual design” and “multi-disciplinary optimisation”methods. Now assume, more realistically, that you have been hired to provide flightprediction tools to an airline operator or a manufacturer of engines or airframes, anational or international aviation authority, an air traffic control organisation. Whyshould they trust your performance software? What is the risk of under-predictingthe mission fuel for an intercontinental flight?
As we worried about conceptual design, the world has moved on. There isincreased emphasis on airplane evolution and upgrading, which is now reflected inmy thinking. At the same time, the environmental performance of the aircraft hasbecome very prominent. Therefore, part of this book is devoted to a wide spectrumof environmental aspects of flight. My initial concerns have slowly shifted from noiseto engine emissions. Noise disappears as the aircraft moves away from the receiver,although not many would like to agree. Exhaust gases remain with us for the nextfew generations. In particular, aircraft condensation trails are there to remind us thataviation is having a measurable impact on our skies. The lack of flexibility in aircraftlevels, stepped cruise and descent, and the use of holding patterns in congested airspace are all problems that need a solution in the coming years.
The book contains considerable advanced material across several disciplines,including aircraft noise, environmental performance, airframe-propulsion integra-tion, thermo-structural performance and flight mechanics. I am conscious of the
audacity of the task I have undertaken, but I am confident that this work meets theexpectations of the aviation industry and the academic world.
I have developed some fully comprehensive flight codes. One code in particular,FLIGHT, to simulate aircraft performance and mission analysis of transport aircraft,contains most of the cross-disciplinary aspects of performance discussed in this book.In its present form it consists of about 160 KLOCS (thousand lines of code). Othercodes discussed in the book include the propeller code, that is fully integrated withFLIGHT, as well as a supersonic flight performance code (SFLIGHT). Several blockflowcharts have been included to help with the understanding of computer programs,numerical models, system analysis and flight performance. The following material ismade available to readers:
� Computer code FLIGHT (demo version)� Computer code Prop/FLIGHT (demo version)� Computer code SFLIGHT (demo version)� All charts and figures in any suitable graphical format
Separate technical documents will be issued to the readers wishing to work withthese computer models.
Dr. Z. Mohammed-Kassim, my long-time associate, has actively contributed tothe work on aircraft noise and to considerable code debugging. My doctoral studentNicholas Bojdo took great care in reading some chapters. I am indebted to my editor,Peter Gordon, who has been enthusiastic about my work from the beginning of theproject to the end. The editorial and production work was efficiently managed byPeggy Rote at Aptara, Inc.
Finally, I thank my wife, Susan, for having the patience to tolerate my late nightsat the desk, especially when I reached the tunnel phase of my work, that is, whenI thought the book was finished but in fact there was no end in sight. A sabbaticalleave from the University has allowed me to step up my efforts. I am grateful to theUniversity, and the School, for the opportunity they have given me.
Below is a list of organisations that publish regularly documents (technical reports,papers, journals, regulations) as well as more general information of aviation.
AAIB Air Accidents Investigation Branch, United Kingdom (www.aaib.gov.uk)AIAA American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics (www.aiaa.org)ANSI American National Standards Institute (www.ansi.org)ASTM American Society for Testing and Materials (www.astm.org)BTS Bureau of Transportation Statistics, USA (www.bts.gov)CAA Civil Aviation Authority (www.caa.co.uk)EASA European Aviation Safety Agency (www.easa.eu.int)ESDU Engineering Data Unit (www.esdu.com)FAA Federal Aviation Administration (www.faa.gov)FSF Flight Safety Foundation (www.flightsafety.org)IATA International Air Transport Association (www.iata.org)ICAO International Civil Aviation Organisation (www.icao.int)IPCC Inter-governmental Panel for Climate Change (www.ipcc.ch)Jane’s Jane’s Information Systems (www.janes.com)MIL Military Standards (www.mil-standards.com)NASA National Administration for Space and Aeronautics (www.nasa.gov)NATO Advisory Group, Aerospace Research & Development (www.rta.nato.int)NATS National Air Traffic System, United Kingdom (www.nats.co.uk)NTSB National Transportation Safety Board, United States (www.ntsb.gov)RAeS The Royal Aeronautical Society (www.aerosociety.org)SAE Society of Automotive Engineers (www.sae.org)SAWE Society of Allied Weight Engineers (www.sawe.org)
Acronyms Used in This Book
ACT Additional Centre TankAEO All Engines OperatingAF Activity Factor
APU Auxiliary Power UnitASDA Accelerate-Stop Distance AvailableASI Air Speed IndicatorASK Available Seat per KilometreATC Air Traffic ControlAUW All-Up WeightBFL Balanced Field LengthBPR By-pass RatioBRGW Brake-Release Gross WeightCAS Calibrated Air SpeedCASK Cost per Available Seat per KilometreCDA Continuous Descent ApproachCG Centre of GravityCTOL Conventional Take-off and LandingDOC Direct Operating CostsDOCG Dry Operating Centre of GravityDOF Degree of FreedomDOW Dry Operating WeightEAS Equivalent Air SpeedEBF Externally Blown FlapECS Environmental Conditioning SystemEGT Exhaust Gas TemperatureEPNdB Effective Perceived Noise, in dBEPNL Effective Perceived Noise LevelETOPS Extended Twin-Engine OPerationSFADEC Full Authority Digital Engine ControlFCA Final Cruise AltitudeFCOM Flight Crew Operating ManualFDR Flight Data RecorderFL Fuselage Line; Flight LevelFLS Flight Level SeparationFMS Flight Management SystemGPS Global Positioning SystemGPU Ground Power UnitGRW Gross Ramp WeightGTOW Gross Take-off WeightIAS Indicated Air SpeedICA Initial Cruise AltitudeICW Initial Cruise WeightIDA Initial Descent AltitudeIGE In Ground EffectILS Instrument Landing SystemISA International Standard AtmosphereKCAS Calibrated Air Speed in knotsKEAS Equivalent Air Speed in knotsKIAS Indicated Air Speed in knots
KTAS True Air Speed in knotsLRM Long-Range Mach numberMAC Mean Aerodynamic ChordMBGW Maximum Brake-Release WeightMCP Maximum Continuous PowerMEW Manufacturer’s Empty WeightMIL Military Standards (USA)MLW Maximum Landing WeightMRM Maximum-Range Mach numberMRW Maximum Ramp WeightMSP Maximum Structural PayloadMTOP Maximum Take-off PowerMTOW Maximum Take-off WeightMZFW Maximum Zero-Fuel WeightNADP Noise Abatement Departure ProcedureOASPL Overall Sound Pressure LevelOAT Outside Air TemperatureODE Ordinary Differential EquationOEI One Engine InoperativeOEW Operating Empty WeightOGE Out of Ground EffectOPR Overall Pressure RatioPAX PassengersPNL Perceived Noise LevelPNLT Perceived Noise Level, Tone CorrectedPWL One-third octave band Power LevelSAR Specific Air RangeSAT Static Air TemperatureSEL Sound Exposure LevelSEP Specific Excess PowerSFC Specific Fuel ConsumptionSHP Shaft Horse PowerSI International Units SystemS/L Sea LevelSPL Sound Pressure LevelSTOL Short Take-off and LandingTAS True Air SpeedTAT Total Air TemperatureTMA Terminal Manoeuvre AreaTOCG Take-off Centre of GravityTOD Top Of DescentTODA Take-off Distance AvailableTODR Take-Off Distance RequiredTOGA Take-off and Go-AroundTORA Take-off Distance RequiredTORR Take-Off Run Required
TOW Take-off WeightTSFC Thrust-Specific Fuel ConsumptionULD Unit Load DeviceVMC Minimum Control SpeedVMCA Minimum Control Speed in AirVMGC Minimum Control Speed on the GroundVMO Maximum Operating SpeedVNE Velocity Not to ExceedWAT Weight-Altitude-TemperatureWBM Weight and Balance ManualZFCG Zero-Fuel Centre of GravityZFW Zero-Fuel Weight
The U.S. Department of Defense and NATO publish a dictionary of acronymsand aviation jargon. A detailed list of symbols follows each chapter.
This book makes reference to real flight vehicles in realistic flight conditions. Thedata used to model these vehicles have been extracted, elaborated, interpolated orotherwise inferred from documents available in the public domain. These documentsare either published by the manufacturer or the operators, or both. They are sup-plemented with official data published by several aviation authorities at the nationaland international level. Many of these documents are freely available to the publicin electronic format from the manufacturers, through their websites, or the websitesof their customers, or by third parties. No commercial, sensitive or restricted datahave been disclosed anywhere. All sources have been cited when appropriate. Thereis no implication that the data refer to any particular aircraft owned or operated byany organisation. The flight performance shown is often validated, but sometimes itis not. Whenever figures or tables report the term “simulated” or “validated”, theyrefer to simulations carried out with the comprehensive performance code FLIGHTand its related software technology (available from the author).
Readers should be made aware that the statements made in this book are theauthor’s own. Readers should use judgement before making technical, commercial,military, marketing or business decisions. The author cannot take responsibility forany action resulting in damage, accident or loss, as a consequence of statementsmade in this book. None of the graphs, figures and tables shown in this book can beused to make a final judgement on any airplane, any manufacturer, any flight, anyservice or any design. Use of the graphs for flight planning is prohibited. If you arein doubt, please consult the author, or use the performance codes from the aircraftmanufacturers.